Express Properties

Search Button

The Indian Express

The Financial Express

Latest News

EIW

Market Indicators

Screen

Celebrity Chat

Express Computers

Express Power

Letters

Advertisers Forum


Express Careers

Business Forum

Match Maker

Express Properties

Palki - Travel & Tours

Information Technology

Astrosurf

Eco-India

Dr Know

Morning Digest

Graffiti

Crossword

Drumbeat: Ad Buzzaar


INDIAN EXPRESS FRONT PAGE

Politics

Business

Expressions

General

World

Sports

Leisure

States

 

Thursday, September 17, 1998

Tibetan official says CIA once helped guerrillas

AGENCE FRANCE PRESSE  
NEW DELHI, SEPT 16: The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) once helped Tibetan guerrillas in the 1950s and 1960s, an official with the Dalai Lama's government-in-exile admitted on Wednesday.

Sonam Dagpo said the CIA assistance to the Tibetans began even before the Dalai Lama fled to India in 1959 following a failed anti-China uprising.

``We are aware the CIA helped the Tibetan cause,'' he told AFP here, commenting on a Los Angeles Times report that the CIA gave the Tibetan exile movement 1.7 million dollars a year through much of the 1960s.

The funding was part of the CIA's Cold War effort to undermine the governments of Communist countries, notably China and the Soviet Union, the daily said.

The CIA also trained Tibetan guerrillas in Nepal and at a covert site in Colorado, it said, citing declassified intelligence documents released by the State department.

``The Tibetans were trained in Nepal and they launched guerrilla attacks in the early 1960s,'' Dagpo said. ``There was guerrilla trainingin eastern Tibet in the mid- 1950s.''

``Everyone knows that. The CIA really helped.''

But Dagpo said he did not know anything about the Times report that the CIA also gave 180,000 dollars to the Dalai Lama.

The Dalai Lama, spiritual leader of six million Tibetans, lives in India as the head of a government-in-exile which is based in the northern Indian hill town of Dharamsala. It is not recognised by any country.

India is also home to some 100,000 Tibetan exiles.

Dagpo said the Dalai Lama's government had been ``running on a shoe-string budget for the past many, many years.''

He said the government-in-exile was mainly financed by the gold and jewellery which the Dalai Lama brought with him to India and on voluntary contributions from the mass of Tibetan exiles.

The Times said the CIA had long resisted efforts to disclose information about its Tibetan operations. China still accuses the Dalai Lama of being an agent of foreign forces seeking to secede Tibet.

The CIA aid ended inthe 1970s after the then president, Richard Nixon, made his historic overtures to China, Times said.

Tibetan exiles have acknowledged they once received support from US intelligence. The Dalai Lama in a 1990 autobiography, ``Freedom in Exile,'' said his brothers did make contact with the CIA in 1956.

He said the CIA agreed to help, not because it wanted to aid Tibetans, but in an effort to undermine communist China.

Copyright © 1998 Indian Express Newspapers (Bombay) Ltd.


Top


Sardar Sarovar Narmada Nigam Ltd.

Bank of India

Astrosurf
 

Click here for a printer-friendly page Printer-friendly page

India Gift House


The Indian Express  |  The Financial Express  |  Latest News
Screen  |  Express Investment Week  |  Market Indicators  |  Express Computers
Astrosurf  |  Eco-India  |  Travel & Tourism  |  Information Technology  |  Drumbeat: Ad Buzzaar
Advertisers Forum  |  Career India  |  Business Forum  |  Match Maker  |  Express Properties